Before correcting the time zone we need to know what is the exact timezone we need to set the server to.
Login to the Server as sroot user:
/usr/share/zoneinfo
Here you will find all the zones available to be configured on your Linux server.
If you want to configure the timezone "Europe/London" you will find the file in path.
/usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/London
Step 1: Configure the /etc/sysconfig/clock
Using the vi editor edit the file and set the ZONE parameter.
ZONE="Europe/London"
Step 2: Configure the /etc/localtime
cd /etc
cp -p local local.old
ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/London /etc/localtime
Step 3: Reboot the server for the system to be aware of new settings.
We can setup the NTP server also using the following steps.
ntpdate -q ntp_server_address
If no errors are displayed in above command then the NTP server is accessible and will update the time on server too.
You can also configure the ntp server address in the file /etc/ntp.conf
server ntp_server_address1
Login to the Server as sroot user:
/usr/share/zoneinfo
Here you will find all the zones available to be configured on your Linux server.
If you want to configure the timezone "Europe/London" you will find the file in path.
/usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/London
Step 1: Configure the /etc/sysconfig/clock
Using the vi editor edit the file and set the ZONE parameter.
ZONE="Europe/London"
cd /etc
cp -p local local.old
ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/London /etc/localtime
Step 3: Reboot the server for the system to be aware of new settings.
We can setup the NTP server also using the following steps.
ntpdate -q ntp_server_address
If no errors are displayed in above command then the NTP server is accessible and will update the time on server too.
You can also configure the ntp server address in the file /etc/ntp.conf
server ntp_server_address1
server ntp_server_address2
server ntp_server_address3
After this you can restart the ntp service
service ntpd restart
After this you can restart the ntp service
service ntpd restart